WSU receives $1.5M to track zoonotic viruses in livestock

PULLMAN, Wash. — The Washington Animal Disease Diagnostic Laboratory (WADDL) at Washington State University has been awarded a $1.5 million grant to identify and track respiratory pathogens in the Pacific Northwest with the potential to spread between humans and livestock. This includes the highly pathogenic avian influenza virus H5N1 that has recently jumped from birds into dairy cattle.

While considerable research has gone into zoonotic diseases — infections that spread between animals and humans — minimal attention has been directed toward small- and medium-sized ruminant hosts, including cows, goats and sheep. These species have been undersampled and a better understanding of virus transmission between animals and humans is needed, especially at events like county fairs where people and animals mix.

“These are species that have the potential to spread diseases to humans,” said Dr. Thomas Waltzek, a virologist at WADDL in the College of Veterinary Medicine who is leading the new project along with WADDL’s executive director, Dr. Kevin Snekvik. “It’s all about detecting these diseases quickly, determining if the viruses have pandemic potential and immediately taking corrective actions to hopefully prevent a pandemic.”

https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/Hot+P_SECAUTH_21+Dumps+Don%27t+Miss+Your+Chance+to+Pass+Your+Exam
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/C_THR97_2311+PDF+Dumps+Start+Your+Journey+to+Certification+Success
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/New+C_THR86_2311+Exam+Dumps+Are+Updated+Regularly+to+Ensure+Accuracy
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/The+Best+C_TS4CO_2021+Exam+Dumps+2024+for+Guaranteed+Success
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/The+Best+P_C4H340_34+Braindumps+2024+for+Guaranteed+Success
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/Hot+C_TS4FI_2021+Braindumps+Don%27t+Miss+Your+Chance+to+Pass+Your+Exam
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/Authentic+P_S4FIN_2021+PDF+Dumps+Are+Affordable+and+Easy+to+Use
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/Legit+C_TS460_2021+Braindumps+Are+the+Key+to+Your+Success
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/Reliable+C_TFG61_2211+Dumps+Get+the+Best+Possible+Preparation+for+Your+Exam
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/Trendy+C_C4H410_21+Dumps+PDF+Are+the+Best+Way+to+Ace+Your+Exam

The project, which is being funded by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Washington Department of Health, allows WADDL to expand its ongoing surveillance of avian flu and other zoonotic diseases like SARS-CoV-2 as part of the Pathogen Genomics Centers of Excellence, a national network of labs dedicated to preparing for and responding to infectious disease threats.

WADDL joined the network in 2023 and began making infrastructure updates and adding positions, including those in its new next-generation sequencing (NGS) section created to quickly sequence genomes of infectious agents to track the spread of emerging diseases of potential risk to human and animal health. The larger mission of this national one health network is to quickly detect viruses of pandemic potential and use that information for corrective actions to be taken in prevention of the next pandemic.

“This funding has expanded WADDL’s capacity and exposed our growing NGS team to regional and national diagnosticians and researchers who have unquestionably helped us prepare for dealing with the current H5N1 outbreak and future such events,” Waltzek said.

Although WADDL and its partners have been tracking H5N1 for some time in domestic and wild birds, its jump into dairy cattle was unexpected. WADDL quickly confirmed the first H5N1 cases in dairy cattle farms in Idaho and sequenced the viral genomes to demonstrate that recently transported dairy cattle from Texas had brought the virus with them.

“The efforts of the WADDL NGS section members — including Becca Wolking, Brandi Torrevillas, Jillian Daigle, Marla Francis, and Dr. Azeza Falghoush — have been critical to WADDL’s ability to track H5N1 strains as they emerged in wildlife and livestock,” Waltzek said.

As of May 29, H5N1 has been detected in dairy herds in nine states. Two dairy farm workers have contracted the virus; however, the CDC says the risk to the public is low. While the disease is not causing cattle death, it is negatively affecting milk production in affected animals. Introduction of HPAI into dairy herds most likely occurred by exposure to wild birds that was followed by cow-to-cow spread.

H5N1 has already devastated the U.S. poultry industry and caused billions of dollars in losses. It has also had a huge impact on wildlife. WADDL has partnered with veterinarians and biologists who recently documented the spread of H5N1 from seabirds into harbor seals in Puget Sound, Washington.

“The number of wild birds dying, including raptors, is staggering,” Snekvik said. “And it’s not just birds, now it’s raccoons and skunks and seals. Luckily, it is not highly pathogenic for humans. We hope a mutation doesn’t occur that leads to something like that, but we need to be closely monitoring the situation.”

‘Got Milk?’ WSU researchers partner with farmers to solve dairy industry challenges

Washington State University’s Knott Dairy Center is working with dairy farmers around the state to learn more about the challenges facing today’s industry and research solutions to those problems.

The Knott Dairy Center is home to approximately 180 lactating cows. In operation for more than six decades, the dairy farm continues to lead the way in dairy teaching, research, and outreach to support the state’s dairy industry. The center is one of the few remaining university dairies in the country.

“Dairy is the second highest agriculture commodity in the state,” said Amber Adams-Progar, associate professor in Dairy Management. “Building a partnership between WSU and the industry has been crucial to identifying challenges, conducting research, and providing real-world solutions. Our goal is to work with industry to improve the quality of life for our state’s dairy cows.”

A few years ago, dairy farmers approached researchers at the Knott Dairy Center to find a solution to deal with pest birds. While dairy cows are out for milking, birds will eat cow feed, selecting only the nutritious feed and leaving less nutritious pieces behind. As a result, farmers were experiencing a loss of feed. Additionally, researchers noticed that interactions between cows and birds have caused cow-to-cow behavioral issues. With birds overtaking parts of the feed trough, less space is available in the feed bunk for the cows. This in turn, causes cows to become more aggressive with other cows and fight over feed in a smaller space.

“European starlings are particularly invasive and cause problems on dairy farms,” said Adams-Progar. “Some farms see over 10,000 birds a day.”

Researchers at Knott Dairy Center found two solutions to the pest bird problem. First, researchers introduced American kestrels to the dairy to scare away the European starlings. Next, they installed lasers that turn on right before dusk to prevent the European starlings from setting up their night roost in barns.

https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/C_S4EWM_2020+PDF+Dumps+Are+the+Only+Way+to+Guarantee+Success
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/High-Quality+C_THR88_2311+Dumps+PDF+With+Guaranteed+Success
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/Use+C_BRSOM_2020+Exam+Dumps+We%27ll+Help+You+Pass+Your+Exam
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/Use+C_THR89_2311+Exam+Dumps+We%27ll+Help+You+Pass+Your+Exam
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/Use+C_BRU2C_2020+Exam+Dumps+We%27ll+Help+You+Pass+Your+Exam
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/2024+C_THR92_2311+Exam+Dumps+Don%27t+Leave+Your+Exam+Preparation+to+Chance
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/C_SIG_2201+Dumps+PDF+Get+the+Edge+You+Need+to+Pass+Your+Exam
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/C_THR94_2311+Braindumps+Start+Your+Journey+to+Certification+Success
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/High-Quality+C_THR95_2311+Dumps+PDF+With+Guaranteed+Success
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/Legit+C_THR96_2311+PDF+Dumps+Are+the+Key+to+Your+Success

“We’re doing applied research in a controlled university dairy,” said Adams-Progar. “We can learn, then take all that data and knowledge back to the people that can use it directly.”

The farm is also tackling climate change issues through research that examines how to reduce methane produced by cows. Globally, livestock is responsible for about 14.5% of anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions, with methane accounting for a substantial portion of these emissions. Dairy cows alone are responsible for emitting approximately 20–25% of the total methane emissions from livestock. This means that dairy cows emit roughly between 2.9–3.6% of methane in the world.

Methane is produced either directly from the mouths of dairy cows or can be generated from manure under certain conditions, such as during storage, before it can be further used for fertilizing crops.

Researchers are finding that feed additives may help to reduce methane. Marcos Marcondes, assistant professor in the Department of Animal Sciences, is leading a study, started in March, that adds seaweed to cows’ diets to help reduce the amount of methane they produce.

“Every day, we give a pellet of feed with the seaweed additive to a cow and measure the amount of methane produced from her,” said Marcondes. “It has been said that bacteria could adapt to seaweed overtime. Thus, we need to confirm this claim by evaluating the long-term efficiency of feeding cows with seaweed.”

This 300-day study may shed light on the role dairy cows and farmers play on climate change.

“The Knotts Dairy Farm is the perfect model where we can test different theories and see what works,” said Adams-Progar. “We’re not only helping the cows, but we’re also helping farmers. When the cows are healthier, it’s better for both the cows and farmers.”

Cougar Pride sculptures find homes across WSU system

For more than a decade, the bronze Cougar sculpture on the northeast corner of Gesa Field has been a prominent fixture of the Pullman campus.

Countless Washington State University students, employees, and fans have flocked to have their pictures taken since its dedication in 2008, when the complex was still known as Martin Stadium. Lines of people waiting for their turn for a photo are common sights during home football games, family weekends and graduation season. 

Now, thanks to a generous alumnus, new replicas of this iconic sculpture have been installed on campuses across the WSU system. The years-long mission to bring the same sense of pride and place to every physical campus is nearly complete, with the final dedication events for the Vancouver and Everett campuses taking place this spring.

https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/The+Best+C_THINK1_02+Dumps+2024+for+Guaranteed+Success
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/Top+C_CPE_16+PDF+Dumps+Are+Created+by+Experts+in+the+Field
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/Updated+C_THR81_2311+Exam+Dumps+Your+Success+is+Our+Top+Priority
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/Authentic+C_PO_7521+Braindumps+Are+Affordable+and+Easy+to+Use
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/New+C_THR82_2311+Dumps+Are+Updated+Regularly+to+Ensure+Accuracy
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/%5B2024%5D+C_BW4HANA_27+PDF+Dumps+Pass+Your+Exam+with+Confidence
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/2024+C_THR83_2311+Dumps+PDF+Are+the+Best+Way+to+Secure+Your+Future
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/2024+C_THR84_2311+PDF+Dumps+Don%27t+Leave+Your+Exam+Preparation+to+Chance
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/C_THR85_2311+Exam+Dumps+Are+the+Only+Way+to+Guarantee+Success
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/Legit+C_THR87_2311+Braindumps+Are+the+Key+to+Your+Success

“I am very proud of all the Cougar Pride projects and the joy as well as the memories that each invokes among Cougars,” Gary Schneidmiller, WSU Class of 1971 and the donor behind the initiative, said. “I appreciate the opportunity to have been involved in creating something that is lasting and meaningful to Cougs everywhere.”

From fur to bronze

WSU’s original Cougar Pride sculpture was first envisioned by a committee Schneidmiller put together during the 2007 stadium renovation.

Between 1927 and 1978, WSU’s mascot Butch was a live cougar. The first Butch was presented to then-Washington State College by Gov. Clarence Martin during the team’s homecoming football game Nov. 11, 1927. Its namesake was former quarterback Herbert “Butch” Meeker, who garnered acclaim for his tenacious play, particularly in a 1925 upset of the University of Southern California.

Following the death of Butch VI in 1978, a poll of students concerning the future of the mascot was taken, with the majority opposing continuation of the tradition. That was the end of the live mascot era at WSU, with the cage that housed the animals being disassembled in the years that followed.

Two decades later, Schneidmiller and his fellow alums wanted to bring Butch back, albeit in bronze rather than in the flesh. The statue is situated near the former Butch’s Den, and was dedicated Nov. 22, 2008. The plaque commemorates the history of the live cougar era, and also serves as a tribute to Schneidmiller’s parents, Manuel and Gladys Schneidmiller.

Beyond Pullman

About a decade later, Schneidmiller sat down for coffee with WSU President Kirk Schulz and Mike Connell, vice president for advancement and CEO of the WSU Foundation. He pitched the pair the idea of having Cougar Pride sculptures installed on every physical campus.

“We were thrilled with the idea,” Connell recalled. “A lot goes into a gift like this, having the statues made, getting them installed, determining what kind of pedestal is needed and where it’ll be placed on each campus. For Gary to be willing to make this fantastic gift is an incredible gesture that exemplifies his passion for WSU.”

Mike Fields, who worked on the original Cougar Pride statue along with his dad Chester, was brought in to recreate the sculptures.

While the Cougar Pride statue in Pullman is two-and-a-half life size, those on the Spokane, Vancouver, Tri-Cities and Everett campuses are slightly smaller at twice life size. Each bronze Cougar stands 10 feet tall, 6 feet wide and 12 feet long, and including the rock it stands atop, weighs 2,500 pounds.

Fields had the original sculpture scanned, and then used digital sculpting software to refine that data before having the entire piece 3D printed and the rock CNC milled. He then spent significant time working the model cat with high-speed tools before adding clay and re-sculpting for detail.

“Technology is invaluable, but it is still limited, and this hand work is still necessary to capture subtle details and emotion,” Fields said.

With the rock and refined master completed, the process of molding and casting was undertaken. All together, the process of creating new Cougar Pride sculptures took three years to complete.

Washington state-wide LGBTQ+ survey starts June 1

PULLMAN, Wash. — Just in time for the kickoff of Pride month, a Washington State University-led team will launch the first comprehensive survey of the state’s LGTBQ+ residents on June 1.

The survey team will be attending Pride events and other gatherings across the state this summer to invite queer and transgender people from Washington to complete the survey. The goal is to hear concerns from the LGBTQ+ community and increase state officials’ understanding of the community’s demographics and geographic distribution. People who would like to participate can also fill out a survey online at lgbtq.wa.gov/survey.

The Washington State LGBTQ Commission is sponsoring this study. In contrast to some other states’ proposed policies and changes that aren’t beneficial for queer and transgender people, the state of Washington is working to support its LGBTQ+ community, said lead researcher Traci Gillig.

https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/The+Best+C_C4H630_34+Dumps+PDF+2024+for+Guaranteed+Success
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/High-Quality+C_CPE_15+Dumps+With+Guaranteed+Success
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/High-Quality+C_TS450_2020+Braindumps+With+Guaranteed+Success
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/pages/resumedraft.action?draftId=279201257&draftShareId=bdaeffcd-f030-48b9-bf50-7b504ca7acf2&
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/Updated+C_CPI_2404+Dumps+Your+Success+is+Our+Top+Priority
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/Hot+C_TS410_2020+PDF+Dumps+Don%27t+Miss+Your+Chance+to+Pass+Your+Exam
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/Legit+C_DBADM_2404+Braindumps+Are+the+Key+to+Your+Success
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/Updated+E_S4CPE_2023+PDF+Dumps+Your+Success+is+Our+Top+Priority
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/2024+C_BOBIP_43+PDF+Dumps+Are+the+Best+Way+to+Secure+Your+Future
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/Global+C_S4TM_2020+Braindumps+Are+the+Key+to+Your+Certification+Success

“The government of Washington is actively trying to make this state a safe and welcoming place for LGBTQ+ people,” said Gillig, an assistant professor in WSU’s Murrow College of Communication. “This survey is going to be very valuable for LGBTQ+ people like me. It will help gather information and share people’s voices with lawmakers, so they can continue to move policy in a helpful direction.”

Members of the survey team, who are all LGBTQ+ individuals, will be out at Walla Walla Pride on June 1 and the next day at Tri-Cities Pride on June 2. They also plan to attend Pride events in Spokane and Yakima on June 8 as well as Seattle Pride on June 30 and the Palouse Pride event on Aug. 24, among others. The team will also be working to connect with LGBTQ+ Washingtonians from rural areas and Native American tribes as well as those who are undocumented or face other challenges to having their voices heard.

The survey is anonymous, and participants can volunteer their email on a separate form and be entered in a raffle drawing to win a $50 gift card. The team plans on awarding up to 350 gift cards during the seven-month survey collection period.

In addition to in-person activities, the effort includes using social media to reach potential participants through Instagram, Facebook, TikTok and X/Twitter. You can find more information on all these platforms @walgbtqsurvey.

The team, led by Gillig, also includes partners Veronica S. Smith from Sankofa Consulting and Crystallee Crain from Prevention at the Intersections as well as several WSU research assistants and Sankofa Consulting research associates.

“We’re doing our best to reach everyone where they are in Washington,” said Gillig. “We love when people are excited about taking the survey and share it with their LGBTQ+ communities. So, in addition to participating, we encourage people to reach out to their friends and family members who would be interested in taking the survey.”

WSU’s first residency program graduates inaugural class of doctors

A new residency program created by Washington State University’s Elson S. Floyd College of Medicine in partnership with Everett’s Providence Regional Medical Center to train internal medicine physicians is graduating its first cohort of doctors.  

The 12 resident physicians will become attending physicians, qualified to practice medicine independently, in a June 8 ceremony that marks their completion of three years of training.

“This is a group of individuals who are very dedicated to the patients they serve and to making a difference in the community through advocacy and outreach work,” said Program Director Matthew Hansen, MD. “It’s been incredibly rewarding to see them grow over the last three years and to see the difference the program has made in the community.”

Residency plays an essential part in the process to become a licensed physician in the U.S. After obtaining a medical degree, doctors must complete additional training in their chosen specialty through a residency program and pass a national exam to become board certified in their specialty.

The Internal Medicine Residency Program welcomed its inaugural cohort in 2021 and now has a total of 40 resident physicians working their way through the three-year program. Residents work at hospitals and clinics in the Puget Sound area under the supervision of community physicians, gaining experience in a range of clinical care settings.

In its first three years, the program has brought more doctors to Washington communities and partnered with Providence Medical Group to launch a large primary care clinic that acts as a safety net for the Everett community. Program faculty and residents designed two specialty initiatives at the clinic to care for complex patients with heart failure and advanced liver disease, resulting in decreased emergency room visits and hospitalizations for these patients. Residents have also provided care beyond the clinic, practicing street medicine and treating people experiencing houselessness outside of typical hospital settings.

I really feel like our program puts the words of its mission into action, and I think that we’re seeing that with our first graduating class going into practice in rural areas of the Northwest.Dr. Katie Buckman

“The commitment to serving the underserved is part of what brought me to this program specifically,” said current resident Adam Panzer, MD. “If anything, the experience has redoubled my commitment and joy in working with those populations.”

Most of the graduates plan to stay in the Pacific Northwest to practice medicine as hospitalists or primary care physicians. Others will become chief residents with the program, fulfilling a leadership role for an additional year, or pursue specialized training through fellowships or additional residencies.

“I really feel like our program puts the words of its mission into action, and I think that we’re seeing that with our first graduating class going into practice in rural areas of the Northwest,” said resident Katie Buckman, MD.

The first graduation ceremony also marks a major milestone for program faculty and administrators. They significantly expanded the program’s community partnerships, adding more than 10 new partners to its five main training sites since the program’s launch. New partners include the Everett VA Clinic, the Tulalip Health System serving the Tulalip Tribes, and Lahai Health, which serves low-income populations.

https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/Updated+C_SECAUTH_20+PDF+Dumps+Your+Success+is+Our+Top+Priority
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/E_HANAAW_17+Dumps+PDF+Start+Your+Journey+to+Certification+Success
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/2024+E_S4CEX_2021+Dumps+PDF+Don%27t+Leave+Your+Exam+Preparation+to+Chance
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/2024+C_SIGDA_2403+Exam+Dumps+Are+the+Best+Way+to+Secure+Your+Future
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/Reliable+C_SIGPM_2403+Exam+Dumps+Get+the+Best+Possible+Preparation+for+Your+Exam
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/Trendy+C_LUMIRA_24+Braindumps+Are+the+Best+Way+to+Ace+Your+Exam
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/2024+C_SACS_2321+Exam+Dumps+Don%27t+Leave+Your+Exam+Preparation+to+Chance
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/C_ACT_2403+Dumps+PDF+Are+the+Only+Way+to+Guarantee+Success
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/Top+C_SACP_2321+Braindumps+Are+Created+by+Experts+in+the+Field
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/Legit+E_ACTAI_2403+Braindumps+Are+the+Key+to+Your+Success

These partnerships support the WSU College of Medicine’s mission of improving access to care in underserved communities and are central to the college’s community-based model, where learners train at community hospitals and clinics rather than at a university-owned teaching hospital.

“This program holds so much potential for how it can further impact communities locally and throughout the state. I really can’t wait to see what happens in these upcoming years,” said Buckman.

The internal medicine residency is the first of the college’s three graduate medical education programs, in addition to the new Family Medicine Residency Program in Pullman and Pediatric Residency Program in Spokane.

Temporary standards and procedures for campus events and demonstrations

Today, we write to share two important updates about Penn’s policies and procedures for when, where, and how open expression can take place. Throughout the academic year, members of the Penn community have urged University leadership to clarify and update our guidance and policies specific to campus events and demonstrations. This request for increased clarity also emerged as a priority recommendation in the final reports from both the University’s Task Force on Antisemitism and the Presidential Commission on Countering Hate and Building Community.

First, effective immediately, Penn will adopt and implement Temporary Standards and Procedures for Campus Events and Demonstrations. In developing these Temporary Standards, feedback and input were sought from School Deans, the Faculty Senate, and student, faculty, and staff leaders.

The purpose of these Temporary Standards and Procedures is to reinforce and reaffirm Penn’s commitment to open expression and, at the same time, ensure that events, demonstrations, and other expressions of free speech are appropriately managed, while allowing Penn to deliver its core missions of teaching, research, service, and patient care without disruption. We encourage all members of the Penn community to review these Temporary Standards and Procedures, which consolidate, organize, clarify, and update guidelines specific to campus events, including demonstrations.

https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/Trendy+C_MDG_1909+Dumps+PDF+Are+the+Best+Way+to+Ace+Your+Exam
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/Reliable+C_FIORD_2404+Dumps+PDF+Get+the+Best+Possible+Preparation+for+Your+Exam
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/Premium+C_SAC_2402+Braindumps+Are+the+Best+Way+to+Get+Ahead
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/C_HANAIMP_17+Dumps+PDF+Are+the+Only+Way+to+Guarantee+Success
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/C_BYD15_1908+PDF+Dumps+Get+the+Edge+You+Need+to+Pass+Your+Exam
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/Global+C_EPMBPC_11+Dumps+Are+the+Key+to+Your+Certification+Success
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/2024+C_SRM_72+PDF+Dumps+Are+the+Best+Way+to+Secure+Your+Future
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/pages/resumedraft.action?draftId=279201129&draftShareId=8c802cf4-0467-4eb5-8baf-b95ca9be3344&
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/Trendy+C_THR91_1811+PDF+Dumps+Are+the+Best+Way+to+Ace+Your+Exam
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/pages/resumedraft.action?draftId=279201143&draftShareId=527eea65-cf81-4d43-9f1f-4063c70b21d4&

Second, a faculty-led Task Force will be charged with reviewing the Guidelines on Open Expression and making recommendations for revisions to the Guidelines. Penn remains steadfast in its commitment to freedom of thought, inquiry, speech, and lawful assembly, and it is essential from time to time that we review the Guidelines on Open Expression to ensure they are supporting these foundational commitments.

Lisa Bellini, Senior Vice Dean for Academic Affairs, Perelman School of Medicine, and Chair of the Committee on Open Expression, and Sigal Ben-Porath, MRMJJ Presidential Professor of Education and Faculty Director of the SNF Paideia Program, will co-lead the Task Force. Additional members will soon be appointed, and the Task Force will begin its work this summer.

The Task Force’s work will follow the historical precedent for reviewing the Guidelines on Open Expression, which last occurred in 1989. This review will include the Task Force providing recommendations for consideration by the Committee on Open Expression (COE). The COE, in turn, will present recommendations to the University Council. The University Council will then present final recommendations to the Interim President. As part of this effort, the Task Force will also be charged with reviewing the Temporary Standards and Procedures for Campus Events and Demonstrations.

These are important steps forward for our campus community, and we look forward to sharing additional updates as this work progresses over the summer.

Sincerely,

J. Larry Jameson
Interim President

John L. Jackson, Jr.
Provost

Craig R. Carnaroli
Senior Executive Vice President

Weitzman’s Rossana Hu on adaptive reuse and historic architecture

elebrated architect Rossana Hu joined Penn as Miller Professor and chair of the Department of Architecture in the Weitzman School of Design in January of this year. Hu is founding partner of Neri&Hu Design and Research Office, the award-winning interdisciplinary architecture practice based in Shanghai, and served as professor and chair of the Department of Architecture in the College of Architecture & Urban Planning at Tongji University before coming to Penn.

Hu describes her “common sense” approach to adaptive reuse and her firm’s reputation for breathing new life into historic sites, and explains how her thinking about adaptive reuse evolved over the years.

“That question really points to the heart of our practice, both how we started, and where we want to take the practice. Our first adaptive reuse project really came out of not even knowing much about the topic. It’s a term that is becoming really fashionable, but often, before a term is widely used, people are already doing the work. For us, that’s definitely the case. We started with The Waterhouse at South Bund,” Hu says. “It was a very bold decision on our part because the site was supposed to be demolished—that was the original mandate from the client. They wanted a brand-new, talked-about building, and in their mind, that meant starting from scratch.”

https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/%5B2024%5D+C_C4H47I_34+Dumps+Pass+Your+Exam+with+Confidence
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/Top+C_HCMP_2311+Braindumps+Are+Created+by+Experts+in+the+Field
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/High-Quality+C_TB1200_10+Dumps+PDF+With+Guaranteed+Success
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/%5B2024%5D+C_THR12_2311+Dumps+Pass+Your+Exam+with+Confidence
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/Hot+C_BYD01_1811+PDF+Dumps+Don%27t+Miss+Your+Chance+to+Pass+Your+Exam
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/pages/resumedraft.action?draftId=279200970&draftShareId=9b7e2e6f-320d-428c-ac36-8e2d3773666d&
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/pages/resumedraft.action?draftId=279200988&draftShareId=820f751c-6346-49e9-946a-69a62c9b5b16&
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/C_TS414_2021+PDF+Dumps+Are+the+Only+Way+to+Guarantee+Success
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/Top+C_SM100_7210+PDF+Dumps+Are+Created+by+Experts+in+the+Field
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/The+Best+C_S4EWM_1909+Braindumps+2024+for+Guaranteed+Success

“A lot of our design work focuses on resolving things by using common sense. Doing something as simple as buying a chair that can be used for a hundred years: That is a form of sustainability. With a building, if you don’t tear it down, and you use the structure and the walls, there’s a huge reduction in carbon footprint,” Hu says. “Nobody needs to go to school to learn this, it’s just common sense that you don’t throw things away.”

As for her curriculum at Weitzman next year Hu says, “I think it will be a studio—I usually teach studios—most likely focusing on adaptive reuse. Over the past three or four years, our practice has become very interested in focusing on ethnic enclaves and projects that deal with multi-ethnicity and inner-city issues. We’ve been working with Chinatowns in San Francisco as well as Milan,” Hu says. “I find Philadelphia’s Chinatown very interesting: It’s gone through many different transformations, and there are debates right now about plans for a new arena. I think it could be really interesting to use that as a studio site.”

Read more at Weitzman News.

Fruitful insights on the brain from research on flies

enescent cells, often described as zombie-like, are ones that have stopped dividing but are still alive. They do not function as effectively they used to; instead, they resist death and linger in the body, causing trouble.

“These cells can be beneficial in the short term, as in wound healing,” explains University of Pennsylvania neuroscientist and geneticist Nancy M. Bonini. “But over time, they accumulate and release noxious pro-inflammatory signals that can contribute to cognitive declines, increase frailty, and weaken the immune system.”

A bottleneck in research on senescence is identifying and manipulating naturally occurring senescent cells in vivo. Most insights into senescence have come from in vitro studies or induced models, leaving a gap in understanding how these cells form and function naturally in living organisms.

In a new paper published in Nature, research led by China N. Byrns of the Bonini lab discovered that senescent cells naturally occur in the brain of a fruit fly (Drosophila melanogaster) with age. By isolating these cells, they found that a subset of support cells in the brain, glia, express specific genes that indicate their senescence status. The researchers found that neurons’ power stations, mitochondria, decline with age, experimentally reproducing this decline in young neurons triggers a senescence response in glia, signaling a link between neuronal health and the glial senescent state.

https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/C_BOBIP_42+Exam+Dumps+Are+the+Only+Way+to+Guarantee+Success
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/Reliable+C_TFG51_2211+Exam+Dumps+Get+the+Best+Possible+Preparation+for+Your+Exam
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/Trendy+C_BOWI_42+Exam+Dumps+Are+the+Best+Way+to+Ace+Your+Exam
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/Authentic+C_DS_42+Exam+Dumps+Are+Affordable+and+Easy+to+Use
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/C_THR12_67+PDF+Dumps+Start+Your+Journey+to+Certification+Success
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/Trendy+C_KYMD_01+Dumps+PDF+Are+the+Best+Way+to+Ace+Your+Exam
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/2024+C_TBW50H_75+Dumps+PDF+Are+the+Best+Way+to+Secure+Your+Future
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/High-Quality+C_FSUTIL_60+Exam+Dumps+With+Guaranteed+Success
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/2024+C_BASD_01+Braindumps+Don%27t+Leave+Your+Exam+Preparation+to+Chance
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/High-Quality+C_TADM70_21+Dumps+PDF+With+Guaranteed+Success

“Our ability to experimentally reproduce these cells as they appear in aging hints that we have found one mechanism by which these cells occur naturally, paving the way for prevention,” Byrns says.

“We can use the fly’s powerful genetics,” Bonini says, “to understand how these cells impact brain function and potentially develop strategies to slow down age-related cognitive decline in humans.”

TBI in the fly

Bonini explains that this study originated from an unexpected discovery during Byrns’ earlier research on traumatic brain injury (TBI) in Drosophila: A specific pathway was activated not in the neurons, but in the glial cells.

This pathway, controlled by a regulatory transcription factor AP1, was significantly activated in glial cells, suggesting these cells played a protective or reactive role to the injury.

That fortuitous finding shifted Byrns’ focus towards further investigating the role of the AP1 pathway in the natural aging process. She found that the same pathway activated by TBI in young flies also became activated as the flies aged and then that it was associated with the development of senescent cells.

“We were looking at the effects of TBI, but what we found was that the trauma seemed to accelerate processes that occur naturally as the flies age,” Bonini says. “This led us to hypothesize that there might be a connection between the brain’s response to injury and the natural aging process, mediated through the activation of this specific pathway.”

New ‘armored’ CAR therapy produces significant responses in cancer patients

hile CAR T cell therapy has revolutionized treatment for many blood cancers, including non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL), many patients who receive CAR T cell therapy do not experience a long-term remission. For those whose cancers return or become resistant after CAR T cell therapy, the prognosis is poor, with few options left.

A new “armored” form of CAR T cell therapy, developed by Carl June, the Richard W. Vague Professor in Immunotherapy at the Perelman School of Medicine, may be able to help these patients. According to the results of a Phase I clinical trial, the new CAR T is safe, and has a three-month overall response rate of 80% in 20 patients with NHL whose cancers relapsed or had stopped responding to treatment after receiving a commercially available CAR T cell therapy.

“By the time we treat someone with commercially available FDA-approved CAR T cell therapies, they’ve already tried at least one other treatment that either didn’t work at all or their lymphoma relapsed, and they’re very hopeful that CAR T cell therapy—which has made such a difference for so many—will work for them too,” says Jakub Svoboda, an associate professor of hematology-oncology, who led the clinical trial at Penn Medicine’s Abramson Cancer Center.

https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/High-Quality+E_BW4HANA214+Exam+Dumps+With+Guaranteed+Success
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/Trendy+C_ABAPD_2309+Exam+Dumps+Are+the+Best+Way+to+Ace+Your+Exam
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/Legit+C_THR70_2309+PDF+Dumps+Are+the+Key+to+Your+Success
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/Reliable+C_TS422_2022+PDF+Dumps+Get+the+Best+Possible+Preparation+for+Your+Exam
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/The+Best+C_HANATEC_19+Dumps+PDF+2024+for+Guaranteed+Success
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/The+Best+C_TSCM52_67+Dumps+2024+for+Guaranteed+Success
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/High-Quality+C_S4CFI_2402+Exam+Dumps+With+Guaranteed+Success
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/New+C_S4CPB_2402+Exam+Dumps+Are+Updated+Regularly+to+Ensure+Accuracy
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/2024+C_S4CPR_2402+Dumps+Are+the+Best+Way+to+Secure+Your+Future
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/Premium+C_S4CS_2402+Braindumps+Are+the+Best+Way+to+Get+Ahead

“We’ve likened this CAR T to an armored truck or tank because the release of IL 18 further protects the CAR T cells and promotes their ability to attack the cancer cells,” says June, whose pioneering research led to the first approved CAR T cell therapy in 2017.

Read more at Penn Medicine News.

Brigitte Weinsteiger named H. Carton Rogers III Vice Provost and director of the Penn Libraries

he University of Pennsylvania has named Brigitte Weinsteiger as H. Carton Rogers III Vice Provost and director of the Penn Libraries, effective June 1. Provost John L. Jackson Jr. announced the appointment today following a national search.

Weinsteiger has served as the Gershwind and Bennett Family Senior Associate Vice Provost for Collections and Scholarly Communications since September 2022 and as interim director since September 2023. In this capacity, she oversees the Libraries’ $30 million budget for collections, its 10 million print and electronic volumes, 350,000 journals, and a rich array of digital resources. She leads the Collections and Scholarly Communications division of the Penn Libraries, ensuring that the selection, acquisition, management, and preservation of the Libraries’ collections meet the diverse needs of the Penn community, and oversees outreach, teaching, and research support to faculty and students at Penn, in Philadelphia, and beyond.

“Brigitte has been a visionary and dynamic leader of the Penn Libraries for more than 16 years,” said Jackson, “placing a high priority on engaging our campus and our community, advancing diversity and inclusion across our collections, and promoting open communications both internally and externally. She will be a great partner for all of us in advancing the values of In Principle and Practice in the years ahead, accelerating interdisciplinary inquiry across campus while deepening our connections with local neighbors and with the wider world through research and scholarship. 

“I am very grateful to Deputy Provost Beth A. Winkelstein and the members of the consultative committee that she chaired, who helped us to arrive at this outstanding result for our university.”

https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/%5B2024%5D+C_HRHFC_2311+Braindumps+Pass+Your+Exam+with+Confidence
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/C_C4H320_34+Exam+Dumps+Are+the+Only+Way+to+Guarantee+Success
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/Global+C_BW4H_214+Dumps+Are+the+Key+to+Your+Certification+Success
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/C_C4H620_34+Exam+Dumps+Are+the+Only+Way+to+Guarantee+Success
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/Top+C_HRHPC_2311+Dumps+Are+Created+by+Experts+in+the+Field
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/Authentic+C_DS_43+Braindumps+Are+Affordable+and+Easy+to+Use
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/pages/resumedraft.action?draftId=279200507&draftShareId=073035fb-7e02-46a6-9791-8b519c22139c&
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/Reliable+C_SACS_2316+Dumps+PDF+Get+the+Best+Possible+Preparation+for+Your+Exam
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/2024+C_SACP_2316+Dumps+PDF+Don%27t+Leave+Your+Exam+Preparation+to+Chance
https://confluence.skatelescope.org/display/EXT/Authentic+C_TS410_2022+Dumps+Are+Affordable+and+Easy+to+Use

In her 16-year tenure with Penn Libraries, Weinsteiger has overseen a wide range of departments, including the 11 departmental libraries situated in academic and cultural buildings across the university’s campus, among them the Fisher Fine Arts Library and the recently renovated Holman Biotech Commons. Leading 115 highly experienced staff, along with hundreds of student employees and interns, she has launched initiatives that advance the Penn Libraries as a whole, including Diversity in the Stacks, and the transformation of Penn scholarship to make it freely available to the world. She also led the formation of the new Center for Global Collections and defined a set of strategic priorities for the Libraries’ Special and Global Collections that emphasize building distinctive collections that create an enduring contribution to history and global understanding. 

“I see my role as a library leader to connect vision, partners, resources, and strategy. Libraries are not just about books or buildings; they are also about people,” Weinsteiger said. “A central aim of the Libraries will be to engage and partner with university and community stakeholders in furthering the University’s academic and societal mission, including effective communication and collaboration with partners, a pragmatic resolve to inspire a culture focused on practical outcomes and engagement, and an ethos of entrepreneurship to find opportunities across campus and beyond.”

Weinsteiger comes to the role with a master of science in library and information science from Drexel University as well as a master of arts in liberal arts with a focus in medieval studies from the University of Pennsylvania, along with two bachelor of arts degrees from Penn State, one in medieval studies and one in integrative arts.